#New Yorkers Who’ve Experienced Homelessness React to Subway Killing #Usa #Miami #Nyc #Houston #Uk #Es

#New Yorkers Who’ve Experienced Homelessness React to Subway Killing #Usa #Miami #Nyc #Houston #Uk #Es

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“Out there you are vulnerable. It’s safer in here behind doors,” Kevin, who declined to provide his last name, told City Limits outside the 30th Street Intake Shelter Thursday. He is among several currently or formerly homeless New Yorkers to empathize this week with the late Jordan Neely.

Adi Talwar

Shannon Hartman with her cat Makaveli. Hartman said she knew Jordan Neely from spending time around Grand Central, and said he would always ask her how she was doing. “The homeless look out for the homeless,” she said.

Jeffrey Jones can recall how bad he felt at times, riding the subway when he was homeless. Though he has lived in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, for more than a decade now, he was unhoused for more than 20 years.

“I looked at people’s faces and said to myself, ‘Why oh why am I living like this, and why oh why can’t I have a normal life like these people?’” he told City Limits on Thursday while picking up lunch outside of the Atlantic Armory Shelter on Bedford Avenue. “And at times I wanted to be someone else.”

Jones was among several currently or formerly homeless New Yorkers to empathize this week with the late Jordan Neely, a 30-year-old man who died Monday after being put in a chokehold by another subway passenger on the F train in lower Manhattan, an incident that was at least partially captured on video. 

According to one witness account posted to Facebook in Spanish, Neely had yelled that he did not have food or drink, and was fed up and didn’t mind going to jail, or dying. The man who choked Neely has not been charged with a crime, though the Manhattan District Attorney has opened an investigation into the incident. The city’s medical examiner has ruled the death a homicide

Prior to his death, Neely stayed in public spaces, according to Shannon Hartman, who knew him from the area around Grand Central Station. She remembered his Michael Jackson impersonations fondly, and said he would always ask her how she was doing.

“He used to sew his clothes, when he danced, by the bathrooms inside Grand Central. Very sweet man,” she recalled Friday morning, outside of a Dunkin’ Donuts on Lexington Avenue. “He even gave me money. Like, the homeless look out for the homeless. It’s something we do.”

More than 77,000 people slept in a city homeless shelter this week, a number that’s surged over the last year. The number of street homeless New Yorkers is harder to track, though the city’s annual HOPE census, conducted in January, estimated there were 3,439 unsheltered residents at the time.

Hartman, sitting alongside her cat Makaveli, laid out a sign with a large heart and the words “Justice 4 Jordan.” She said his killer must be prosecuted: “He needs to go to jail for murder. Because that wasn’t fair.”

Asking for help as a homeless person can be frustrating, according to Hartman, who last saw Neely several months ago. “It’s hard when people continuously tell you no,” she said. “And I don’t want them to blame it on mental health, because it’s not always that.”

Neely was also upset about the death of his mother, she added. Christie Neely was murdered in 2007, according to a GoFundMe launched by Neely’s aunt, Carolyn.

“He was upset about his mom, but that’s so understandable,” Hartman said. “My mom’s alive but my dad died like three years ago, so I understand the pain.”

People trying to make sense of Neely’s killing should consider the pervasiveness of both racial and economic discrimination, according to Jones, of Crown Heights, who did not know Neely personally.

Jones is Black, as was Neely, and the video shows that the man who choked him was white. “If he was a white person with a suit and tie working on Wall Street that wouldn’t have happened to him like that,” Jones said. “They wouldn’t have choked him like that.”

Others who did not know Neely or witness his killing described the need to be alert on the street and in the subway, acting in such a way as to avoid attention.

“To be aware is to be alive,” said Kevin, who declined to provide his last name, standing outside of the 30th Street Intake Shelter for homeless men in Manhattan. “Out there you are vulnerable. It’s safer in here behind doors.”

Another man, who gave the name Chris, said he’d experienced more tension inside a shelter than on the subway in his short time in New York City. “It was a guy who had his stuff stolen or something so he just walked into the waiting room and said, ‘I’m going to slap everybody, and watch when I find the guy who did it,’” he recalled. “It’s kind of fucked up that you gotta deal with that. But that’s life.” 





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